Happy 20th Birthday, Yamaha Disklavier!

With a rich technological heritage and innovative new applications, cutting-edge performance reproducing piano continues to entertain, influence and inspire.

BUENA PARK, Calif.  Twenty years ago, when Yamaha Corporation of America first introduced the 48" Yamaha Disklavier upright piano in the United States, the announcement of the groundbreaking instrument was made in conjunction with a PianoSoft music library of eleven 3.5" magnetic floppy disks. At the time, the innovative recording and reproducing piano allowed owners to create libraries of their own performances and then play them back or purchase disks of pre-recorded music.

Yamaha Disklavier Mark IV

Fast-forward through two decades of technological advances and visionary enhancements. In 2007, the Yamaha Disklavier is available in a full line of pianos, from upright models all the way through to 9' Mark IV PRO Yamaha grands. These days, thanks to Yamaha's innovative Internet Direct Connection (IDC) feature, players can browse and immediately download thousands of songs.

"The Disklavier's cutting-edge technology, acoustical authenticity, ease-of-use and reliability were once nearly inconceivable," says Bill Brandom, Disklavier Piano Marketing Manager. "This truly remarkable instrument consistently reveals Yamaha Corporation of America's innovative approach to music-making, as well as its dedication to staying well ahead of the curve."

A brief timeline of technological advances reveals the Disklavier's rise to market prominence as an easy-to-use, yet astonishingly interactive, instrument that can reproduce "live" acoustic piano concerts and ensemble music with full instrumental backings and vocal tracks.

December 1987  The first Disklavier, the MX100A, with record and playback capabilities, is introduced in the U.S.

March 1988  First consumer purchase of a Disklavier upright piano

July 1989  First Disklavier grand piano, with incremental pedaling and self-calibrating capability

September 1992  The MX1000II/DGPII is released with ensemble record capability

February 1996  The MX100IIXG/DGPIIXG is released, featuring 2HD, SMF and Flash Memory

July 1997  The DGTIIXG GranTouch with Disklavier system arrives. This was the first digital piano, equipped with an acoustic grand action and installed Disklavier system.

March 1998  The DKVPRO, a high-end Disklavier with Servo Control Solenoids suitable for studios, institutions and other advanced recording and professional music production needs, is released

April 1998  The DGPS Disklavier Grand is released, the first featuring Silent Function

November 2000  World premiere of George Antheil's Ballet Mécanique in its original instrumentation from 1926, performed by 16 Disklavier pianos

2000-2001  Two Disklaviers (1988 upright piano and PRO2000) are displayed during PIANO 300: Celebrating Three Centuries of People and Pianos exhibit at The Smithsonian Institute, and video of the Disklavier PRO2000 in action is featured during PBS broadcast of People and Pianos: 300 Years

2005  Release of Nude Rolling Down An Escalator: Studies for Disklavier by Kyle Gann, the first CD composed and performed entirely on a Disklavier

2005  Introduction of the Elton John Signature Series Red Piano, a special edition series of 30 "Chinese Red" Mark IVs featuring five actual Elton John performances recorded specifically for the Series and unavailable anywhere else

September 2006  First commercial CD recording using the technology of Zenph Studios and Disklavier Pro to capture the original performance intentions of Glenn Gould's legendary 1955 rendition of Bach's Goldberg Variations

April 2007  Disklavier version 2.0 launched, featuring DisklavierRadio and DisklavierMusicStore, marking the first time in history that an Internet-connected player piano streams live performances into the home, offering non-stop entertainment, 24/7. Users can either listen to live streams of a variety of musical genres or purchase music for download to enjoy whenever they wish.

In 1988, a McDonald's at the junction of Interstate 70 and Highway 24 in Limon, Colorado was the first restaurant to install a Disklavier in their establishment; nearly 20 years later, it's still there, performing every day. Today, as visible proof of the Disklavier's acoustic excellence and digital versatility, hundreds of colleges and universities, churches, restaurants, medical facilities, hotels and recording studios rely on Disklaviers to entertain, inspire and produce high-quality musical experiences.

And, the future of piano pedagogy has been forever changed, thanks to the Disklavier's virtual elimination of geographic barriers between pianist and educator. In 2006, Yamaha Corporation of America and the Yamaha Disklavier piano won the Music Teachers National Association's (MTNA) Frances Clark Keyboard Pedagogy Award, marking the first time a music product received the honor. According to Dr. Samuel Holland, executive director of the Frances Clark Piano Foundation, the award recognized the Disklavier as "a product whose influence on how music can be created and thereby taught is truly transformative  an influence so potentially great that we are still only beginning to glimpse the possibilities."